Fabula
S8E2 · Terror of the Autons Part 2

Doctor diagnoses Jo’s hypnotic trauma

In the UNIT laboratory, the Doctor swiftly neutralizes a booby-trapped box—likely planted by the Master—by hurling it through a window into the canal, where it detonates. The explosion triggers Jo Grant’s catatonic state, revealing she was under post-hypnotic alienation. The Doctor explains to Yates and Benton that Jo’s attempted sabotage was the result of the Master’s mind-control, which can override even deeply ingrained moral resistance. Yates presses Jo for the Master’s location, but the Doctor clarifies she’s in a dissociative state, unable to recall. The scene underscores the Master’s psychological warfare capabilities, the fragility of human will, and the urgency of UNIT’s response. Benton’s reaction to the explosion highlights the escalating stakes, while Yates’ frustration reveals the team’s desperation to act despite their vulnerability. The Doctor’s clinical yet compassionate demeanor contrasts with the grim reality of the Master’s influence, framing Jo’s trauma as both a personal tragedy and a strategic threat to the mission.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Following an explosion after the Doctor throws a booby-trapped box into the canal, Yates questions the Doctor. The Doctor explains that Jo indirectly alerted him to the danger, prompting Yates to inquire about her condition.

tense to curious

The Doctor identifies Jo's catatonic state as post-hypnotic alienation resulting from the Master's influence. He elaborates on the Master's ability to control minds and the psychological impact on Jo.

concerned to explanatory

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4

Traumatized and dissociated, her mind refusing to accept the actions she was forced to take under hypnosis, leaving her in a state of deep emotional and psychological shock.

Jo Grant stands catatonically, staring blankly into space, unresponsive to Yates' attempts to question her about the Master's location. The Doctor diagnoses her as suffering from post-hypnotic alienation and schizoid dissociation, a trauma response to being forced to act against her will. She is guided to sit in a chair by the Doctor, who attempts to comfort her.

Goals in this moment
  • None (in her current state, Jo is unable to pursue any goals; she is entirely reactive to the Doctor's care and the situation around her).
  • Subconsciously, she may seek to escape the trauma of her hypnotic conditioning.
Active beliefs
  • She has been irreparably compromised by the Master's influence, leading to a breakdown in her sense of self and agency.
  • The Doctor is her only source of stability and safety in this moment of crisis.
Character traits
Vulnerable and traumatized Unresponsive due to psychological distress Trusting of the Doctor's guidance and care Silent but visibly affected by the events unfolding around her
Follow Jo Grant's journey

Clinical yet compassionate, balancing the urgency of the situation with a deep concern for Jo's well-being and the safety of the team. There is a subtle undercurrent of frustration with the Master's manipulation but a steadfast resolve to counter it.

The Doctor swiftly identifies and neutralizes the booby-trapped box by throwing it through the window into the canal, triggering an explosion that reveals Jo's catatonic state. He diagnoses her condition as post-hypnotic alienation and schizoid dissociation, explaining the Master's ability to override human moral resistance through hypnosis. He guides Jo to sit down and attempts to comfort her, while also addressing Yates' and Benton's questions about the situation.

Goals in this moment
  • Neutralize the immediate threat posed by the booby-trapped box to ensure the safety of the team
  • Diagnose and address Jo's psychological trauma resulting from the Master's hypnosis, providing her with care and stability
Active beliefs
  • The Master's mind-control is a serious and insidious threat that must be countered with both scientific and psychological understanding.
  • Jo's condition, while severe, is not permanent, and her mind will eventually struggle to free itself from the Master's influence.
Character traits
Quick-thinking and decisive in crisis Compassionate yet clinically analytical Authoritative in explaining complex psychological and scientific concepts Protective of Jo and the UNIT team
Follow The Third …'s journey
Mike Yates
primary

Frustrated and tense, driven by a sense of urgency to locate the Master and neutralize the threat. His concern for Jo is evident, but his impatience with her condition and the Doctor's explanations creates a palpable tension in the scene.

Captain Yates questions the Doctor about the booby trap, Jo's condition, and the Master's location, fetching a chair for Jo and expressing concern about the limitations of hypnosis. He presses Jo for information despite the Doctor's warnings, revealing his frustration and desperation to act against the Master's threat.

Goals in this moment
  • Obtain critical information about the Master's location from Jo to enable UNIT to take immediate action
  • Understand the nature of the Master's mind-control to better prepare UNIT for future encounters
Active beliefs
  • Jo holds vital information that could turn the tide against the Master, and her unresponsiveness is a critical obstacle.
  • The Doctor's explanations, while insightful, are not providing the immediate solutions UNIT needs to act effectively.
Character traits
Frustrated and desperate for actionable intelligence Protective of Jo but impatient with her unresponsive state Respectful of the Doctor's expertise but skeptical of psychological explanations Quick to act and fetch necessary items (e.g., the chair for Jo)
Follow Mike Yates's journey
Supporting 1

Alarmed but composed, balancing professional duty with personal concern for Jo's well-being and the team's safety.

Sergeant Benton reacts with alarm to the explosion, dragging Jo away from the scene and exchanging dialogue with the Doctor about the booby-trapped box. He later asks a question about the Master's mind-control capabilities, revealing his concern and curiosity about the psychological warfare tactics being employed.

Goals in this moment
  • Ensure the safety of Jo and the team in the aftermath of the explosion
  • Understand the nature of the Master's mind-control to better prepare for future threats
Active beliefs
  • The Master's influence is a serious and immediate threat to UNIT's operations
  • Jo's condition is a direct result of the Master's manipulation, requiring careful handling and medical attention
Character traits
Quick to react under pressure Loyal and protective of colleagues Curious about the Master's methods Respectful yet direct in questioning the Doctor
Follow Sergeant Benton …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

3
Master's Volatiser Bomb (Booby-Trapped Explosive)

The booby-trapped box, planted by the Master, serves as a critical plot device that escalates the tension and reveals the depth of the Master's psychological warfare. The Doctor identifies it as a threat and neutralizes it by hurling it through the window into the canal, where it detonates. The explosion triggers Jo's catatonic state, exposing the Master's hypnotic influence over her and underscoring the fragility of human will in the face of alien manipulation. The box symbolizes the Master's insidious and far-reaching control, even in the heart of UNIT's operations.

Before: Intact and placed strategically within the UNIT laboratory, …
After: Destroyed in the explosion, its remnants scattered in …
Before: Intact and placed strategically within the UNIT laboratory, disguised among other equipment, ready to detonate when triggered.
After: Destroyed in the explosion, its remnants scattered in the canal below, no longer a direct threat but a lingering symbol of the Master's influence.
UNIT Laboratory Canal Window and Adjacent Canal

The canal adjacent to the UNIT laboratory plays a crucial role in the event as the disposal site for the booby-trapped box. The Doctor's decision to throw the box into the canal ensures that the explosion occurs outside the laboratory, protecting the team and the facility from direct harm. The canal's murky waters and the subsequent explosion create a visceral and dramatic moment, emphasizing the danger of the situation and the Master's ability to infiltrate even the most secure locations. The seagulls' squawking in the aftermath adds to the scene's tension, underscoring the disruption caused by the explosion and the Master's schemes.

Before: Calm and undisturbed, its waters reflecting the laboratory's …
After: Disturbed by the explosion, with ripples and debris …
Before: Calm and undisturbed, its waters reflecting the laboratory's exterior and providing a quiet backdrop to the team's activities.
After: Disturbed by the explosion, with ripples and debris visible on the surface. The shockwave from the blast has scattered seagulls and left the area in a state of heightened alertness.
UNIT Laboratory Chair

The chair fetched by Captain Yates for Jo Grant serves as a practical yet symbolic element in the scene. Physically, it provides Jo with a place to sit as she collapses into a catatonic state, offering a small measure of comfort and stability amid the chaos. Symbolically, the chair represents the team's attempt to care for Jo and address her trauma, even as they grapple with the larger threat posed by the Master. It also highlights the contrast between Jo's vulnerable state and the urgency of the situation, as the team must balance their concern for her with the need to act against the Master's schemes.

Before: Unoccupied and part of the laboratory's standard furniture, …
After: Occupied by Jo Grant, who sits blankly in …
Before: Unoccupied and part of the laboratory's standard furniture, likely positioned near a workstation or against a wall.
After: Occupied by Jo Grant, who sits blankly in it as the Doctor and Yates discuss her condition and the implications of the Master's mind-control.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
UNIT Scientific Research Laboratory

The UNIT laboratory serves as the primary setting for this high-stakes event, where the Doctor, Jo, Yates, and Benton grapple with the immediate threat of the booby-trapped box and the revelations of Jo's hypnotic conditioning. The laboratory, typically a sterile and controlled environment for scientific work, becomes a battleground of tension and urgency as the team confronts the Master's psychological warfare. The hum of equipment and the clinical atmosphere contrast sharply with the emotional and physical chaos unleashed by the explosion and Jo's catatonic state. The laboratory's role as a base of operations for UNIT is underscored by the team's reliance on its resources and the Doctor's use of its space to diagnose and address the crisis.

Atmosphere Tense and chaotic, with the sterile clinical atmosphere of the laboratory disrupted by the explosion, …
Function Primary setting for the team's response to the immediate threat and Jo's psychological trauma, serving …
Symbolism Represents the fragility of UNIT's defenses and the insidious nature of the Master's infiltration. The …
Access Restricted to UNIT personnel and authorized personnel only, with heightened security measures in place due …
Sterile benches cluttered with experimental gear and the TARDIS console, creating a contrast between scientific order and the chaos of the moment. Shattered glass from the window scattered across the floor, symbolizing the breach in UNIT's security and the team's sense of safety. Humming equipment that underscores the clinical hush, now broken by raised voices, the explosion, and the Doctor's urgent diagnoses.

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

1
UNIT

UNIT is centrally involved in this event as the organization tasked with combating the Master's alien threat. The laboratory setting underscores UNIT's role as a hub for scientific and military collaboration, where the Doctor, as a scientific advisor, works alongside military personnel like Yates, Benton, and Jo to address the crisis. The explosion and Jo's catatonic state highlight the vulnerabilities within UNIT's operations, as the Master's mind-control tactics infiltrate even the most secure environments. The team's reactions—ranging from Benton's alarm to Yates' frustration—reflect UNIT's broader institutional challenges in responding to psychological warfare and alien manipulation.

Representation Through the collective action of its members (the Doctor, Yates, Benton, and Jo) and its …
Power Dynamics Exercising authority over the situation through the Doctor's scientific expertise and the military structure provided …
Impact The event underscores UNIT's vulnerability to psychological warfare and the need for the organization to …
Internal Dynamics The scene reveals tensions within UNIT's chain of command, as Yates' frustration with the Doctor's …
Neutralize the immediate threat posed by the booby-trapped box and the Master's mind-control to protect UNIT personnel and facilities. Diagnose and address Jo Grant's psychological trauma to restore her to active duty and recover any critical intelligence she may hold about the Master's location and plans. Through the Doctor's scientific and psychological expertise, which guides the team's response to the crisis. Via the military structure and resources provided by Yates and Benton, including the use of the laboratory as a secure and equipped base of operations. By leveraging the collective skills and experiences of its members to address the multifaceted threat posed by the Master.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 4

"The Doctor explains Jo's post-hypnotic state to Yates, then attempts to awaken Jo; reliving the explosion, Jo recalls opening a box and hearing a voice that Doctor questions Jo."

Jo’s mind-control trauma surfaces
S8E2 · Terror of the Autons Part …

"The Doctor explains Jo's post-hypnotic state to Yates, then attempts to awaken Jo; reliving the explosion, Jo recalls opening a box and hearing a voice that Doctor questions Jo."

Jo’s fragmented memory reveals mind control
S8E2 · Terror of the Autons Part …

"Yates attempts to question Jo despite the Doctor's warning, and then The Brigadier continues to question Jo, but the Doctor intervenes and advises Jo to let her mind recover naturally, emphasizing the danger of forcing it."

Doctor Prioritizes Circus Investigation
S8E2 · Terror of the Autons Part …

"Yates attempts to question Jo despite the Doctor's warning, and then The Brigadier continues to question Jo, but the Doctor intervenes and advises Jo to let her mind recover naturally, emphasizing the danger of forcing it."

Jo’s Rejection and Emotional Outburst
S8E2 · Terror of the Autons Part …

Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Part of Larger Arcs

Key Dialogue

"BENTON: Strewth! There's going be some complaints about that you know, Doctor."
"DOCTOR: My dear Sergeant, if that box hadn't been tied, you wouldn't be here to receive any complaints."
"YATES: What's wrong with her?"
"DOCTOR: Almost certainly post-hypnotic alienation."
"YATES: She's been hypnotised?"
"DOCTOR: Well, of course. Why else do you think she tried to blow us all to pieces? Come on, my dear, come and sit down over here."
"YATES: Well, I understood that under hypnosis it was impossible for a subject to be persuaded to do anything that was against his nature?"
"DOCTOR: You thought that under hypnosis it was impossible for a subject to be persuaded to do anything that was against his nature? Well, it's a fallacy, Captain. The Master can completely control the human mind."
"YATES: Is she in some sort of a trance?"
"DOCTOR: I think the current jargon is schizoid dissociation. It's because she was forced to do something against her will and her conscious mind refuses to accept the fact. The result is a deep trauma."
"YATES: Jo? Where's the Master?"
"DOCTOR: She won't remember that."